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By 1890, the population had fallen to 100, and in 1906, 17 pupils attended the two-teacher Frio
Academy. The town slowly dwindled into obscurity even with the addition of telephone connections in 1914. During that year, Frio Town housed a general store and six cattle breeders. In 1929, the town had a
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With the establishment of the town of
Pearsall along the rail route, people began to leave Frio City. By 1883, Pearsall had become the county seat, and in 1886, Frio City changed its name to Frio Town. W. Yancey Kilgore purchased the Frio Town courthouse in 1884, it later housed a general store, the
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was established. In 1877, the courthouse burned down and was replaced by a two-story, native-stone building, funded in part by wealthy local resident W.J. Slaughter. The new courthouse reportedly once had an ornate walnut staircase. In the mid-1870s, Indian attacks in and around Frio City caused the
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By 1953, the townsite was mostly abandoned, and a Mrs. A.C. Roberts owned most of the structures, including the courthouse and roofless jail. The town's population remained steady at 20 throughout the 1960s and even jumped to 49 in 1969. By 1990, all that remained of the once-bustling Frio City was
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In 1872, the town started delivering its own mail with the establishment of a post office in Frio City with James McClain
Elledge at its helm. The town's first merchant was L.J.W. Edwards and the first school in Frio County was a private home in Frio City. During the 1870s, a local chapter of the
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Frio City became known as a "cowboy capital" and cultural center during the 1870s. By the 1880s, estimates of its population hovered around 1,500. Evangelists John Wesley DeVilbiss and Andrew
Jackson Potter preached in the area and the
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the Frio Town
Cemetery and the largely intact ruins of the original courthouse and jail on the private Roberts Ranch. The ruins of the courthouse are considered a historic courthouse by the Texas Historical Commission.
196:. With the rise in construction, high-cost building material from out of town became impractical and led to the establishment of a cypress shingle mill, brick factory, and lime kiln in Frio City.
180:, L.J.W. Edwards completed the first Frio County courthouse in January 1872. The same year, the town's stone jail was built. The jail eventually housed such famed outlaws as
153:, the town was laid out by A.L. Oden in 1871. The river crossing it lay near was named for the fact that numerous cannonballs, swords, and sabers were found there.
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to be called in, and many frontier residents sought shelter in town. The last major Indian attack in the area occurred in the spring of 1877.
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school and five homes. In June 1930, the Rio Grande
Baptist Association celebrated their 50th anniversary at the site of the old courthouse.
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U.S. Geological Survey
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in 1842 were all thought to have used the
Presidio Crossing.
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extended through Frio County, though it bypassed Frio City.
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The first mail to the town was delivered by horseback from
267:: Handbook of Texas Online, University of Texas at Austin
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was organized in Frio City in 1880. That same year, the
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19:Ghost town in Texas, United States
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541:Geography of Frio County, Texas
220:Rio Grande Baptist Association
149:Located 16 miles northwest of
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174:San Antonio
170:Benton City
163:Adrián Woll
125:, known as
535:Categories
508:99°18′10″W
505:29°01′10″N
458:Ghost town
247:References
202:Freemasons
135:Frio River
131:ghost town
34:Ghost town
466:Frio Town
440:community
127:Frio City
123:Frio Town
88:Time zone
383:Pearsall
360:Pearsall
280:Archived
182:Sam Bass
151:Pearsall
418:Hilltop
413:Bigfoot
230:Decline
145:History
54:Country
378:Dilley
370:Cities
213:Growth
178:Leakey
76:County
448:Derby
438:Other
423:Moore
116:(CDT)
114:UTC-5
93:UTC-6
69:Texas
64:State
405:CDPs
81:Frio
137:in
107:DST
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